Where the Ancestors Walked: Australia as an Aboriginal Landscape

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This work delves into the exciting story of one of the oldest continuous civilizations on earth. Beginning with the complexities of early human colonization and continuing through later European resettlement, the history of Australia's native people is told in a wide-ranging and sympathetic fashion. Drawing on research from anthropology, cultural geography, and environmental studies, the intricate and changing ways in which aborigines and white settlers have related to each other is discussed and the origins of aboriginal art, medicine, and music are chronicled.

Author(s): Philip Clarke
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Year: 2003

Language: English
Pages: 282
City: Crows Nest, NSW

Title page
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I Origins of Aboriginal Australia
1 First Human Colonisation
2 Religious Landscapes
3 Social Life
Part II Materials of Culture
4 Hunting and Gathering
5 Aboriginal Artefacts
6 Art of the Dreaming
Part III Regional Differences
7 Living in a Varied Land
8 The South
9 The Central Deserts
10 Beyond Capricorn
Part IV Cultural Change
11 Northern Contacts
12 Arrival of Europeans
13 Aboriginal Australia Transformed
14 Changing Cultural Landscapes
Notes
References
Index